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Emotion and Personality Three Components of Emotion Emotion and Personality Three Components of Emotion

Emotion and Personality Three Components of Emotion - PowerPoint Presentation

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Emotion and Personality Three Components of Emotion - PPT Presentation

Distinct subjective feelings affect Accompanied by bodily changes mostly in the nervous system Accompanied by distinct action tendencies increases in probability of certain behaviors Personality psychologists are interested in emotions because people differ in how they experience them and ID: 748481

happiness emotions people happy emotions happiness happy people negative life affect positive approach primary health emotional high amp depression

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Slide1

Emotion and PersonalitySlide2

Three Components of Emotion

Distinct subjective feelings (affect)

Accompanied by bodily changes (mostly in the nervous system)

Accompanied by distinct action tendencies (increases in probability of certain behaviors)

Personality psychologists are interested in emotions because people differ in how they experience them, and these differences can affect their personalities. Slide3

States vs. Traits

States

are temporary; they come and go.

Depend more on the situation

Have a specific cause (typically originates outside the person)

Traits

are more dispositional and consistent.

Consistent part of someone’s emotional life

Pattern of emotional reactions that are experienced across a variety of situations

Can be used to characterize a personSlide4

Categorical vs. Dimensional Approach

Categorical approach

tries to pare down about 550 words that describe feeling states to a few key emotions

Lack of consensus among researchers in the categorical approach

Dimensional approach

uses factor analysis to analyze self-report data in order to identify the basic emotional dimensions

Remarkable consensus here

Only two primary dimensions: pleasant/unpleasant and arousal (high/low) representing all emotionsSlide5

More about each approach

Dimensional Approach

Refers more to how people

experience

emotions than how they

think

about them

.

Categorical Approach

Relies more on conceptual distinctions among emotions

Primary emotions have either distinct facial expression or direct motivational propertiesSlide6

Primary Emotions (Categorical)

Ekman

—Primary emotions must have distinct facial features associated with them

Anger, disgust, fear, sadness, happiness, and surprise are the 6 primary emotions found by

Ekman

. Possibly a 7

th

--contempt

Izard (1977)—Primary emotions are distinguished by their motivational properties.

Found 10 emotions: anger, contempt, disgust, distress, fear, guilt, interest, joy, shame, surpriseSlide7

Content vs. Style

Another difference between researchers: Do they focus on emotional content, or emotional style?

Content—the specific kind of emotion experienced

Style—how the emotion is experienced (intensity)Slide8

Happiness

The primary focus of positive psychology

Subjective well-being: what individuals think of their own level of happiness

One of the best measure of happiness seems to be simply asking people what percent of the time they are happy.

Two components to measure (highly correlated)

Hedonic component

:

ratio of positive to negative emotions averaged over time

Life satisfaction

:

judgments of life’s purpose or meaningSlide9

Demographic variables of happiness

No traditional demographic variable (age, race, gender, socioeconomic status, religion) is significantly associated with happiness

Extraversion is positively correlated with happiness; neuroticism is negatively correlated with it.

Wealthy countries and countries that give more freedom to its citizens are happier than poor and/or repressed countries. Slide10

Money & happiness

Money is not related to happiness once basic needs are met.

If someone has enough money to cover the basics, additional money is not correlated with additional happiness.

Having superficial things can make us temporarily happy, but true joy and fulfillment come from other sources.

American Paradox

:

We are a materially rich country, so why aren’t we happy?

Slide11

Characeristics of Happy People

Good

rationalizers

Less bothered when peers do better than they do

Don’t worry about how they compare to others

Create meaning in life by interpreting events in terms of humanistic values

Good relationships with at least one intimate other

Often help others

Have a sense of faith or trust

Financial security & health make older people happy

Finding success in school, work, and relationships make younger people happy

Don’t ruminate on the negative events.Slide12

More about Being Happy

Less disease and longer life

Less self-focused

Better social skills

More creative, energetic, forgiving, and trusting

Have lives of meaning and purpose (

eudaimonia

)

Does happiness breed success, or does success breed happiness?

Probably bidirectional causality here. Slide13

Costa & McCrae's Happiness Model

Extraversion traits

 Positive Affect  Subjective well-being

Neuroticism Negative Affect  Negative impact on subjective well-being

High extraversion combined with low neuroticism produces happiness.Slide14

Positive Psychology

Associated with Martin Seligman

A segment of personality psychology that explores the positive forces of life

Concerned with creativity, hope, wisdom, and spirituality

In Health Psychology, this translates into

positive illusions

and

self-healing

processes.Slide15

Tips for How to Be Happy

Help other people.

Spend time with friends and family.

Monitor your wealth-seeking.

Avoid television and get active.

Take time for yourself doing things you enjoy.

Keep lists of things you’re grateful for.

Seek spiritual or awe-inspiring experiences in life.

Set long-term goals and move on quickly after any short-term failures.

Relish the fact that life has many challenges.

Just act happy (self-perception theory).

Seek challenges in work.

Be open to new experiences.

Don’t blow things out of proportion.

Recognize that some people are less

dispositionally

happy than others are.Slide16

Characteristics of Neurotic People

Moody

Complaining

Worrying

Irritable

Anxious

Unstable

PessimisticSlide17

Neuroticism: Biological Causes

Eysenck

: neuroticism is due to an easily activated limbic system.

Neuroticism shows a high degree of stability—even after 45 years.

Research shows it’s associated with increased activation of the anterior

cingulate

cortex.

Neurotic people show greater prefrontal cortex activity when asked to inhibit negative emotions.Slide18

Cognitive causes of Neurosis

Preferential processing of negative (but not positive) information about the self (but not about others)

Richer memory networks surrounding negative emotions

More likely to recall unpleasant memoriesSlide19

Neurosis and Health

Many studies have found links between neurosis and self-reported health symptoms.

Costa & McCrae (1985): it’s only the

perception

of health complaints that’s higher in neurotics, not actual health.

Recent studies have found that neurosis may lower immune responses and thus compromise health.Slide20

Depression

Diathesis-stress model

: Depression results from a combination of preexisting vulnerability and a stressful life event that triggers the depression.

Beck’s cognitive theory

: vulnerability lies in a particular cognitive schema that distorts incoming information in a negative way.

Neurotransmitter theory

: depression results from deficiencies in serotonin,

norepinepherine

, and dopamine.Slide21

Beck's Theory

Distortions are seen in the “

Cognitive Triad”

Self

World

Future

Types of Distortions

(can lead to self-fulfilling prophecies)

Overgeneralization

Arbitrary inferences

Personalizing

CatastrophizingSlide22

Emotional Style

Affect intensity: how strongly someone experiences emotions (high or low)

Low Intensity

High Intensity

Frequent Positive Affect

Contentment; easygoing; serene; calm

Exuberance,

animated joyfulness, zestful enthusiasm

Frequent Negative Affect

Chronic melancholia; mild, persistent unhappiness; dejection; discontentment

Acute & agitated negative affect; distress; aggravation; depression; strong anxiety